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Primary Source
of the Month

A laboratory class at the Tuskegee Institute, photographed by Frances Benjamin Johnston, 1902.
Courtesy, Library of Congress,
Prints and Photographs Division
CONTENTS
"Inherently Unequal": The Access and Right to a Basic Education in the United States
Primary
Source of the Month
Teaching
Strategy
Colonial Williamsburg Teaching Resources
Teaching News
Quotation of the Month
The
Next
Electronic Field Trip is

Yorktown
October 19, 2006
NEW
2006-2007
Teaching
Resources Catalog

20052006 Electronic Field
Trip Scholarships

Games, activities, and resources about life in colonial America.
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TOP STORIES
"Inherently Unequal":
The Access and Right to a Basic Education in the United States
In this article, historian Wilma King examines how race and ethnicity have impacted accessibility to American educational systems and the influence of stereotypes in the intellectual growth and development of the students within these schools.
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Primary Source of the Month:
Tuskegee Institute Laboratory
This month's primary source - a photograph from the Tuskegee Institute - features students in a laboratory lesson. The Institute was founded by a former slave and former slaveholder, and officially opened on July 4, 1881.
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More
Teaching
Strategy: An Education for All?
In this lesson, students will learn about education for African Americans in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century, compare modern American education with that of previous centuries, and consider the importance of education in general.
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Colonial
Williamsburg Teaching Resources for Your
Classroom Colonial
Williamsburg offers a variety of quality
instructional materials dealing with 18th-century
life, including:
- Aesop's Fables Playing Cards
- Eighteenth-century writing implements
- Stories Under African Skies (audio tape or CD)
- A Day in the Life (instructional video series)
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More
Teaching
News
The Library of Congress American Memory Web site is an incredibly rich resource. If you have never spent time browsing through their vast resources, you really should give it a try! One of their many current online exhibits, “With and Even Hand,” focuses on the impact of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision.
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Another related online resource related to this topic is “In Pursuit of Freedom & Equality: Kansas and the African American Public School Experience, 1855–1955.”
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Quotation
of the Month
“I consider a human soul without education like marble in the quarry, which shows none of its inherent beauties, till the skill of the polisher fetches out the colours, makes the surface shine, and discovers every ornamental cloud that runs through the body of it. Education, after the same manner . . . draws out to view every latent virtue and perfection, which, without such helps, are never able to make their appearance.”
~ Joseph Addison
The Spectator, no.215, November 6, 1711 |